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    Thomas Wolsey Notes

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    Wolsey was born in Ipswich‚ Suffolk‚ around 1475. His father‚ who is thought to have been a butcher‚ provided a good education and he went on to Magdalen College‚ Oxford. Wolsey was ordained in around 1498. He became chaplain to the archbishop of Canterbury and later chaplain to Henry VII‚ who employed him on diplomatic missions. Wolsey made a name for himself as an efficient administrator‚ both for the Crown and the church. When Henry VIII became king in 1509‚ Wolsey’s rapid rise began. In 1514

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    Characterization of the Squire The narrator of The Canterbury Tales‚ Geoffrey Chaucer‚ gives a very brief‚ visual description of the Squire. He is an active warrior serving under his father‚ the Knight. His elaborate attire and strong appearance make him very attractive. He has expertise in quite a few talents‚ while also being a brave and effective young knight. He is sensual‚ having a strong desire for women. The Squire is characterized as an attractive‚ talented‚ and very sexual young bachelor

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    The Knights Tale Analysis

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    a true story passed down among the knights of the day. Chaucer presents it with over-stressed traditions of romantic literature. Some of the oddities of the tales are really presented when taken into a whole with the Canterbury Tales. The Knight’s Tale is the first of the Canterbury tales. This may indicate how status is still an important part of class in England. The idea of class is also presented in the Knight’s Tale by being started with Theseus‚ and not the main

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    Wife of Bath

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    Chaucer’s “The Canterbury Tales” What Do Women Want? Issean Lawson English 12 Dan Pike November 28‚ 2012 Lawson 1 What Do Women Want? “And yet he was the most brutal‚ too;\ My ribs yet feel as they were black and blue...I guess I loved him best of all‚ for he\ Gave his love most sparingly to me.”(Chaucer‚ Wife of Bath Prologue 495-504). The Wife of Bath is as some would say “a loose leaf” or “a wild animal yet to be tamed”. The first three husbands that Alison married allowed her to roam

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    because of their gender they were meant to be weak and submissive to men. Geoffery Chaucer a poet in the late medieval period sought to challenge these constraints placed on women during this period‚ through the Wife of Bath‚ a pilgrim in his work The Canterbury Tales. The Wife of Bath is a comprehensive collection of qualities‚ particularly those qualities which we derive from the tale and the introductory prologue‚ that challenge the convention’s of Chaucer’s period. Through the Wife of Bath’s exaggerated

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    Amanda Padron November 19‚ 2012 Period 2 The Canterbury Tales Essay Geoffery Chaucer wrote twenty-four tales but the most noticeable of these twenty-four tales are "The Pardoners Tale" and "The Wife Of Baths Tale". The Wife of Bath’s Tale" is the more likely candidate to win against "The Pardoner’s Tale" in the morality side. The reason her tale has morality is the goodness of the poor and broken. Once her story is near its end and the knight‚ her protagonist‚ is face to face with the old woman

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    The Wife of Bath’s Faithfulness In The Canterbury Tales‚ Geoffrey Chaucer reveals the characteristics of the Wife of Bath through her tale and background. Chaucer portrays the Wife of Bath as a woman of faith through her religious actions and beliefs despite her human faults. Chaucer states in the General Prologue that “not a dame dared stir/ [t]owards the altar steps in front of her‚” meaning that no one stepped in front of her to receive communion (GP ll. 459-460). If one did go ahead of

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    and in Medieval England‚ the gentle from the masses. Of course today‚ although there are still without a doubt class distinction and divisions‚ society has come a long way in a very short time. When Geoffrey Chaucer was writing his masterpiece‚ Canterbury Tales‚ societal oppression was the norm‚ and this inspired many of his character’s whom he created as stereotypes to criticize his world. If one was born poor he or she would be poor for eternity‚ but if one was born rich and noble‚ or gentle as

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    Wife of Bath

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    Wife of Bath Today most feminists commonly depict the Wife of Bath from Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales‚ as the ideal model for the feminist literary figure. However‚ contrary to that belief‚ I feel that both the Wife of Bath and Chaucer himself are just a well-disguised example of the antifeminist views of the fourteen century. To some modern day feminist critics‚ like Carolyn Dinshaw‚ Chaucer was protofeminist‚ a writer ahead of his time‚ who used the medium of literature to speak

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    relation in the 14th century. Some tales glorify rape while other tales seem to want the crime to be punishable. Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales‚ had stories that were a representation of his position or views on the male and female balance of power structure through rape. These particular tales told by Chaucer touched base with the treatment of rape in Canterbury Tales. First‚ The Wife of Bath’s Tale‚ displays a knight knowingly concedes his masculinity to a woman. The Reeve’s Tale incorporates

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